Wiley & sas business Series



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Big Data, Big Innovation full

    WHAT DATA DOES IT NEED? 
 Every organization needs to capture and manage the data that it cre-
ates. Regardless of whether it ’s a small business, a multinational enter-
prise, or a government agency, they all create and leverage data as part 
of their day-to-day operations. Bills need to be paid, customers need to 
be billed, resources need to be managed, services and/or products need 
to be delivered, and outcomes need to be tracked. 
 These largely transactional activities help the business operate. 
They also contribute to big data. There ’s value in the data, but think-
ing strategically requires the ability to step back from this transactional 
point of view and take a more holistic view at how the business oper-
ates. Rather than looking at whether an individual order has been ful-
fi lled, decision makers might be interested in reviewing whether the 
average time needed to fulfi l an order is competitive. 


O R G A N I Z A T I O N A L   D E S I G N


 117
 Taking this more strategic perspective requires the organization to 
view its data differently. This often involves consolidating information 
from multiple operational systems and transforming it such that the 
data is centered around the item of interest. For example, the organi-
zation might be interested in understanding overall customer experi-
ence and satisfaction levels. To determine this, they would normally 
be interested in how each customer interacted with the organization, 
how effective that interaction was, and how frequently the customer 
chose to interact in a particular way. 
 At the lowest level, this information is captured in systems that 
manage transactional interactions. To build this understanding, ana-
lysts might need to pull together data from its contact center, its online 
platform, as well as its order management system. These systems 
revolve around the transactions they manage. Respectively, they are 
concerned with issue tracking, content delivery, and order tracking. 
While each would capture information about the customer to differ-
ent degrees, the comprehensiveness of this information will vary sub-
stantially. Getting to a strategic point of view involves drawing out 
the information of interest across the organization as a whole (the 
customer, in this case) and placing it front and center. 
 Conceptually, this may seem simple. What usually makes this pro-
cess a bit complicated is that each of these systems usually has its own 
way of tracking interactions. For architectural and technical reasons, 
customer identifi cation numbers may not match between systems. At 
a very simplistic level, one system may use the customer ’s full name 
and address as an identifi cation, one may use the customer ’s identifi -
cation number, and one may use the customer ’s online login details. 
Consolidating this information into a single view requires mapping 
tables that link this information together. 
 The rationale behind an enterprise data warehouse is usually that 
this information needs to be stored somewhere. Operational systems 
are normally designed to support a specifi c function rather than offer 
architectural fl exibility, making them a poor landing point for the con-
solidated and aggregated data. Additionally, creating and storing these 
linkages requires processing power, capacity that existing operational 
systems may not have available. Rather than try to force an existing 
system to fi t, most organizations choose to design a system that ’s fi t for 


118 

  
B I G   D A T A ,   B I G   I N N O V A T I O N
the purpose. And so, they establish a warehouse and start merging all 
the organization ’s information into a single environment. 
 This is a nontrivial task and takes years. And, that ’s assuming it 
ever really ends. Most organizations constantly generate new data as 
fast as their ability to capture information increases. Where they may 
start simply tracking which pages were viewed on their website, they 
may eventually get to a point where they track the mouse movements 
made by every customer across each page. With the amount of effort 
and expense organizations invest in creating this single, high-quality 
source of information, it ’s unsurprising that they try to encourage and 
sometimes force business analytics teams to use the warehouse 
and avoid interacting with the upstream source systems. 
 Unfortunately, this isn ’t always possible. Enterprise warehouses 
inevitably make a great starting point (and sometimes, if rarely, an 
ending point), but there are many situations where they simply do not 
contain the information the team needs to drive quality outcomes. In 
these situations, the team needs to source their own information and 
create their own information stores that go outside of the organiza-
tion ’s agreed enterprise warehouse data model. Needless to say, this 
creates a great deal of tension—to the architectural team, it appears that 
the analytics team is duplicating large amounts of data. Even worse, 
data and systems architects often heavily underscope the amount of 
storage space needed by the business analytics team. 
 Understanding why this is the case involves understanding the 
limitations of a traditional warehouse when viewed through a business 
analytics lens. A team is only as good as the data it can source. And, 
analytical data often differs from typical warehouse data in four ways:
    1. 
 
Granularity 
   2. 
 
Temporality 
   3. 
 
Comprehensiveness 
   4. 
 
Statistical completeness   

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